4.7 Review

Identifying the tissues-of-origin of circulating cell-free DNAs is a promising way in noninvasive diagnostics

Journal

BRIEFINGS IN BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/bib/bbaa060

Keywords

cell-free DNA; tissues-of-origin; cfDNA mutation; DNA methylation; fragmentation pattern; noninvasive diagnosis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61702555, U1909208]
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFC0910504]
  3. 111 Project [B18059]
  4. Hunan Provincial Science and Technology Program [2018WK4001]

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This study reviews the development of noninvasive diagnostic methods based on cell-free DNAs, focusing on mutation, methylation, and DNA fragmentation patterns to identify tissues-of-origin. The challenges and future directions in this field are also discussed, providing insights for bioinformatics researchers to improve the identification of tissues-of-origin for cfDNAs.
Advances in sequencing technologies facilitate personalized disease-risk profiling and clinical diagnosis. In recent years, some great progress has been made in noninvasive diagnoses based on cell-free DNAs (cfDNAs). It exploits the fact that dead cells release DNA fragments into the circulation, and some DNA fragments carry information that indicates their tissues-of-origin (TOOs). Based on the signals used for identifying the TOOs of cfDNAs, the existing methods can be classified into three categories: cfDNA mutation-based methods, methylation pattern-based methods and cfDNA fragmentation pattern-based methods. In cfDNA mutation-based methods, the SNP information or the detected mutations in driven genes of certain diseases are employed to identify the TOOs of cfDNAs. Methylation pattern-based methods are developed to identify the TOOs of cfDNAs based on the tissue-specific methylation patterns. In cfDNA fragmentation pattern-based methods, cfDNA fragmentation patterns, such as nucleosome positioning or preferred end coordinates of cfDNAs, are used to predict the TOOs of cfDNAs. In this paper, the strategies and challenges in each category are reviewed. Furthermore, the representative applications based on the TOOs of cfDNAs, including noninvasive prenatal testing, noninvasive cancer screening, transplantation rejection monitoring and parasitic infection detection, are also reviewed. Moreover, the challenges and future work in identifying the TOOs of cfDNAs are discussed. Our research provides a comprehensive picture of the development and challenges in identifying the TOOs of cfDNAs, which may benefit bioinformatics researchers to develop new methods to improve the identification of the TOOs of cfDNAs.

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